Methods and systems for transmitting performance beacons from an embedded device

ABSTRACT

A network sensor, inserted into a mirror port of a network switch or router, may be configured to monitor the network traffic originating from an embedded device. Metadata in the network traffic may be passively extracted by the network sensor and transmitted to a server in order to monitor and analyze the behavior of the embedded device. The server may employ machine learning to distinguish typical behavior of the embedded device from atypical behavior. Further, code may be injected into the firmware of the embedded device, and the code may be programmed to broadcast a performance beacon whenever certain firmware functions are executed. A collection of the performance beacons may be analyzed at the server to reconstruct an execution path of the embedded device, and machine learning may be applied to determine whether the execution path is typical or atypical.

RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a Continuation of U.S. application Ser. No.15/333,084 filed on Oct. 24, 2016, incorporated herein by reference.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to the monitoring of network-connectedembedded devices, and more particularly relates to the detection of theanomalous behavior of embedded devices.

BACKGROUND

Network-connected embedded devices are becoming increasingly widespreadin everyday life. Common everyday life objects (e.g., toasters,refrigerators, shoes, etc.) are being equipped with transceivers,allowing the remote control of these objects, as well as the collectionand remote analysis of the data generated or sensed by these objects. Infact, the term “Internet-of-Things” has been coined to refer to anetwork of such embedded devices.

With the advent of such technology comes the challenge of ensuring theproper operation of such embedded devices. Embedded devices canmalfunction or fail due to a variety of reasons, some beingunintentional (e.g., wear and tear, depletion of battery reserves,etc.), while others being more malicious in nature (e.g., a virus thatalters a controller's behavior leading to the overheating of acomponent, etc.).

Techniques are discussed hereinbelow which allow the behavior ofnetwork-connected embedded devices to be monitored (with minimal efforton the part of the user), and further allow any anomalous behavior ofthe network-connected embedded devices to be detected (also with minimaleffort on the part of the user).

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

In accordance with one embodiment of the invention, a network sensor maybe inserted into a mirror port of a network switch (or router), allowingthe network sensor to monitor all (or a portion of) the traffic thatflows through the network switch. Such network sensor may be configuredto distinguish network traffic originating from embedded devices fromnetwork traffic originating from general-purpose devices (e.g., servers,laptop, desktops). The network sensor may then be configured topassively extract metadata (e.g., protocol type, source/destinationaddress, source/destination port, sequence number, etc.) from thenetwork traffic originating from the embedded devices. The metadata maythen be transmitted to a server, which allows the server to remotelyanalyze the behavior of the embedded devices.

In accordance with one embodiment of the invention, a queue instantiatedon the server may be created to store the metadata from the networksensor (and in the case where there are multiple network sensors, aqueue may be created for each network sensor). By analyzing the metadataover a period of time, a machine learning module instantiated on theserver may gradually learn the typical behavior of each of the embeddeddevices and store a description of the typical behavior in a behavioralprofile. For instance, the machine learning module may learn the timesat which an embedded device typically transmits data, devices that theembedded device typically communicates with, etc. By analyzing therecent metadata of the network traffic, a behavioral analysis module maymonitor the recent behavior of each of the embedded devices. Thebehavioral analysis module may then compare the monitored behavior of anembedded device with its typical behavior, as captured in its behavioralprofile. If the monitored behavior of the embedded device deviates fromits typical behavior, a user may be alerted of the atypical behavior ofthe embedded device.

In accordance with one embodiment of the invention, code may be injectedinto the firmware of an embedded device, causing the embedded device totransmit performance beacons whenever certain firmware functions areexecuted. Performance beacons may include an identifier of the embeddeddevice (e.g., MAC address), an identifier of a function that wasexecuted, a CPU time stamp, and a program counter. In one embodiment ofthe invention, performance beacons may be broadcasted onto a localnetwork, and the network sensor may forward the performance beacons to aserver. In another embodiment of the invention, performance beacons maybe unicast to a specific network-connected device (e.g., server),removing the need for the network sensor. The server may process acollection of performance beacons transmitted from an embedded deviceand reconstruct the execution path of the embedded device. Typicalexecution paths may be learned, and any deviation from such typicalexecution paths may cause an alert to be sent to a user.

These and other embodiments of the invention are more fully described inassociation with the drawings below.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 depicts a system in which the behavior of one or more embeddeddevices may be monitored by one or more processes that are executed on aserver, in accordance with one embodiment of the invention.

FIG. 2 depicts various portions of a TCP/IP packet, including metadatathat may be monitored by a network sensor, in accordance with oneembodiment of the invention.

FIG. 3 depicts a system including various software modules and storageelements that are configured to analyze the behavior of one or moreembedded devices, in accordance with one embodiment of the invention.

FIG. 4 depicts a system including an embedded device that is configuredto transmit performance beacons to a server, in accordance with oneembodiment of the invention.

FIG. 5 depicts a flowchart of an algorithm that has been instrumented totransmit performance beacons at various junctures in the algorithm, inaccordance with one embodiment of the invention.

FIG. 6 depicts a plurality of performance beacons, in accordance withone embodiment of the invention.

FIG. 7 depicts a flowchart of a process for collecting metadata from thenetwork traffic of one or more embedded devices and transmitting thecollected metadata to a server, in accordance with one embodiment of theinvention.

FIG. 8 depicts a flowchart of a process for analyzing the behavior ofone or more embedded devices, in accordance with one embodiment of theinvention.

FIG. 9 depicts a flowchart of a process for comparing a recent behaviorof an embedded device to a typical behavior of the embedded device, inaccordance with one embodiment of the invention.

FIG. 10 depicts components of a computer system in which computerreadable instructions instantiating the methods of the present inventionmay be stored and executed.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

In the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments,reference is made to the accompanying drawings that form a part hereof,and in which are shown by way of illustration specific embodiments inwhich the invention may be practiced. It is understood that otherembodiments may be utilized and structural changes may be made withoutdeparting from the scope of the present invention. Descriptionsassociated with any one of the figures may be applied to differentfigures containing like or similar components/steps. While the sequencediagrams each present a series of steps in a certain order, the order ofsome of the steps may be changed.

FIG. 1 depicts system 100 in which the behavior of one or more embeddeddevices may be monitored by one or more processes that are executed on aserver, in accordance with one embodiment of the invention. Embeddeddevice 102 a and general-purpose (computing) device 104 a may becommunicatively coupled to network 106 a. Embedded device 102 a maycomprise a web-cam, a point-of-sale device, networked medical equipment,an industrial control and supervisory control device, a programmablelogic controller (PLC), a power management device, a security camera, aprinter, a networked embedded device, an unmanned embedded device, asparsely manned embedded device, or another Internet-of-Things (TOT)device. In some cases, an embedded device is programmed to run a singleapplication (i.e., software that is dedicated for one purpose). In somecases, the instructions which control the operation of an embeddeddevice is known as firmware and such instructions are stored onnon-volatile memory (e.g., ROM, EPROM, EEPROM, or flash memory) of theembedded device. In many cases, firmware is loaded on an embedded deviceonly once in the lifetime of the embedded device (i.e., the firmwarethat is resident on an embedded device is rarely updated).

General-purpose device 104 a may comprise personal computers (PCs),laptops and servers. Such general-purpose device is typically capable ofexecuting a plurality of applications (sequentially or in parallel), andthe installation of new applications and the deletion of oldapplications from the general-purpose device are fairly routineoperations. One distinction between general-purpose devices and embeddeddevices is that general-purpose devices can be easily reconfigured(e.g., easily in the sense that a software wizard may be provided toguide a user through the reconfiguration process), while this is not sofor embedded devices (e.g., a user may need to know specific programminglanguages, may need to know how to compile a program to run on aspecific hardware platform, etc.). Another distinction is thatgeneral-purpose devices are expected to have a wider range of behaviorsthan embedded devices. For example, a server may assist a user deposit acheck, stream a movie, purchase a book, locate a patent from a database,rank a collection of webpages, etc. In contrast, the behavior of awireless scale (which is an example of an embedded device) is expectedto be fairly limited (e.g., turn on, initialize weight to zero, measureweight, wirelessly transmit weight, etc.) The more limited range ofbehaviors for embedded devices is one reason why embedded devices arespecifically chosen as the targets of the monitoring described herein(i.e., the limited range of behavior permits an embedded device to becharacterized with a set of typical behaviors, and accordingly allowsthe identification of behavior which deviates from the set of typicalbehaviors).

It is noted that the distinction between embedded devices andgeneral-purpose devices may not be that clear in some cases. Forinstance, a smart phone (e.g., an iPhone') possesses some attributesthat would be characteristic of an embedded device (e.g., softwarededicated for making phone calls), while it also possesses otherattributes that would be characteristic of a general-purpose device(e.g., ability to run a variety of software applications). In oneembodiment of the invention, smart phones may be categorized as embeddeddevices, and the monitoring discussed herein may be applied to smartphones. In an alternative embodiment, smart phones may be categorized as“hybrid devices” (i.e., a hybrid between an embedded device and ageneral purpose device), and the monitoring system may provide the userwith a choice of either monitoring or not monitoring hybrid devices”.Further, while only one embedded device and one general purpose devicehave been depicted as being communicatively coupled to network 106 a,more generally, one or more embedded devices and one or moregeneral-purpose devices may be communicatively coupled to network 106 a.

Network switch 108 a (which may also be a router) may be communicativelycoupled to network 106 a and network 114. Network switch 108 a mayreceive network packets (or more generally, network traffic) fromnetwork 106 a and forward the packets to network 114 or another network(not depicted). Similarly, network switch 108 a may receive networkpackets from network 114 and forward the network packets to network 106a. Network switch 108 a may include a mirror port 110 a that sends acopy of the network packets that are received or transmitted fromanother port of network switch 108 a (e.g., port which is connected tonetwork 106 a or port which is connected to network 114) to networksensor 112 a. In the present case, the network packets that are ofinterest are those from network 106 a (i.e., outbound from network 106 ato network switch 108 a), so mirror port 110 a may be configured to sendnetwork sensor 112 a a copy of all the network packets that are receivedfrom network 106 a, but not network 114. Examples of mirror portsinclude a switched port analyzer (SPAN) port, a remote switch portanalyzer (RSPAN) port, or a roving analysis port (RAP).

Network sensor 112 a may be configured to inspect the network packetsreceived from mirror port 110 a in order to distinguish network packetsthat are transmitted by embedded device 102 a from network packets thatare transmitted by general-purpose device 104 a. In most cases, therewill be no metadata in a network packet that explicitly identifies thenetwork packet as originating from an embedded device. Therefore,network sensor 112 a will need to infer whether a network packetoriginates from an embedded device based on the metadata that is presentin a network packet. Such metadata may include the Internet protocol(IP) addresses (e.g., source and/or destination IP address) and mediaaccess control (MAC) addresses (e.g., source MAC address). For instance,if the destination IP address of a network packet is identified to beassociated with a manufacturer of a web-cam, that network packet may beinferred to originate from a web-cam (which is an embedded device). Asanother example, if the MAC address (i.e., source MAC address) of anetwork packet is identified to be associated with an automobile partsmanufacturer (e.g., via a table that maps MAC addresses to enterprises),that network packet may be inferred to originate from an embeddeddevice. As another example, an operating system may be inferred from ananalysis of TCP signatures, and a determination of whether a device isan embedded device may be made based on the type of operating system ofthe device. More generally, a table may store a mapping from certainmetadata (e.g., IP address, MAC address) to an indication of whether adevice that sent a packet with that metadata is likely to be an embeddeddevice, likely to be a general purpose device, or likely to be a hybriddevice. Such table may be stored at network sensors 112 a/112 b (inwhich case updates to the table may need to be periodically pushed froma centralized database) or may be stored at a centralized location(e.g., server 116) and referenced by network sensors 112 a/112 b whenneeded.

Once network sensor 112 a determines a network packet to be associatedwith an embedded device, network sensor 112 a may passively extract(e.g., monitor network traffic on network 106 a without transmittingsignals onto network 106 a) and transmit certain metadata from thatnetwork packet to server 116 for further analysis. The metadata ofinterest may include the protocol identifier, source address, anddestination address of the Internet protocol (IP) header, as well as thesource port, destination port and sequence number of the transmissioncontrol protocol (TCP) header. See, e.g., FIG. 2, which depicts thestructure 200 of a network packet with the metadata of interestdisplayed in a shaded manner.

In terms of the Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) model, metadata fromdomain name system (DNS) traffic in Layer 5, metadata from Layer 4 andmetadata from Layer 3 packets may be collected. For the DNS traffic atLayer 5, the DNS names of hosts (e.g., IP addresses and DNS names ofFacebook™, Amazon™, and Apple™ update server) that are contacted by anembedded device may be collected. At the Layer 4 transport level, TCP/IPpacket length, time stamp, sequence number, flags, destination IP andsource IP may be collected. At the Layer 3 network level, MAC addressesmay be collected. In one embodiment of the invention, no deep packetinspection is employed by network sensor 112 a (i.e., the TCP data isnot collected by network sensor 112 a), greatly reducing the processingload of the network sensor, as well as potentially making the monitoringof network traffic compatible with payment card industry (PCI) andhealth insurance portability and accountability act (HIPAA)requirements.

In one embodiment of the invention, a first connection of network sensor112 a may be used to receive the mirrored network traffic, while asecond connection (e.g., a dynamic host configuration protocol (DHCP)connection) may be used to transmit the extracted metadata to server 116for further analysis. Such a network sensor may be known as a“multi-homed device”, because it is connected to two networks (i.e.,network 106 a and network 114). In another embodiment of the invention(not depicted), network sensor 112 a may only be connected to mirrorport 110 a, and such connection may be used by network sensor 112 a toboth receive the mirrored network traffic as well as transmit thenetwork traffic metadata to server 116.

In a hardware embodiment, network sensor 112 a may be a self-containeddevice (with a processor and data storage elements) that is insertedinto mirror port 110 a, while in a software embodiment (not depicted),network sensor 112 a may be a software module that is installed ongeneral-purpose device 104 a, 104 b (or other general-purpose device,not depicted) or server 116 (or another server, not depicted). Forexample in the software embodiment, network sensor 112 a may beavailable as a software installer, virtual machine or pre-installedappliance). In another hardware embodiment (not depicted), networksensor 112 a may be a physical device (with a processor and data storageelements) that is integrated into network appliance, such as a wirelessAccess Point or network switch 108 a.

FIG. 1 also depicts network sensor 112 b connected to mirror port 110 bof network switch 108 b, and network sensor 112 b is configured tomonitor the outbound traffic from network 106 b. Embedded device 102 band general-purpose device 104 b may be communicatively coupled tonetwork 106 b, and network packets generated by these devices may beinspected by network sensor 112 b in order to distinguish networkpackets that are transmitted by embedded device 102 b from networkpackets that are transmitted by general-purpose device 104 b (similar tothe functionality of network sensor 112 a).

As illustrated in FIG. 1, one network sensor may be employed to monitorthe outbound traffic of each network (e.g., each local network). In oneembodiment of the invention, each of network 106 a and network 106 b islocated in its own local geographical area (e.g., network 106 a islocated in a building occupied by enterprise A, and network 106 b islocated in a building occupied by enterprise B). In such case, thenetwork sensor may be called an “on-premises” or “on-prem” sensor (i.e.,sensor that is located in the same geographical area as the network thatis being monitored).

The metadata extracted by network sensors 112 a and 112 b may then betransmitted via network 114 to server 116. It is noted that in oneembodiment of the invention, metadata of the network traffic is the onlyinformation transmitted from network sensor 112 a and 112 b to server116. At server 116, the metadata may be stored in datastore 118. Morespecifically, the metadata extracted by network sensor 112 a may bestored in queue 120 a and the metadata extracted by network sensor 112 bmay be stored in queue 120 b (both queues instantiated in datastore118). Further, the metadata in the queues may be tagged with anidentifier of each of the embedded devices (e.g., MAC address), allowingan analysis of the metadata to reveal the behavior (whether normal oratypical) of each of the embedded devices.

Machine learning module 122 (instantiated at server 116) may beconfigured to construct a behavioral profile for embedded device 102 a(102 b) based on the metadata stored in queue 120 a (120 b),respectively. In one embodiment of the invention, machine learningmodule 122 may be named Machine Automation Learning and IntuitionArchitecture (MALTA). Each of the behavioral profiles may be constructedover an extended period of time (e.g., a day, a week, a month), untilthe behavioral profile adequately captures the typical behavior of thecorresponding embedded device. Further, behavioral profiles may becontinually updated to reflect the changing behavior of the embeddeddevices. In one embodiment of the invention, a behavioral profile may berepresented as a vector of values, where each of the values represents astatistical “average” or statistical “cluster” of previous observations.

Behavioral analysis module 124 (instantiated at server 116) may beconfigured to compare a monitored behavior of each of the embeddeddevices (e.g., recently observed behavior) with its typical behavior ascaptured in its behavioral profile. In some cases, such comparisoninvolves comparing an observation from a single point in time (i.e., themonitored behavior) to a history of previous observations (i.e., thetypical behavior) in order to obtain a numerical “sameness” between themonitored behavior and the typical past behavior. The monitored behaviorof an embedded device may be determined from the metadata of thatembedded device which has been collected at one of the queues. If themonitored behavior of an embedded device deviates from its typicalbehavior, a notification module (instantiated at server 116) may beconfigured to send a notification to a user, alerting the user that thebehavior of a particular embedded device deviated from its typicalbehavior and/or further notifying the user the behavior that wasidentified to be atypical. Such an alert may be transmitted to acomputing device of a user communicatively coupled to network 106 a,network 106 b, network 114 or another network (not depicted). Furtherdetails of machine learning module 122, behavioral analysis module 124and notification module 126 are provided below in FIG. 3.

FIG. 3 depicts system 300 including various software modules and storageelements that are configured to analyze the behavior of one or moreembedded devices, in accordance with one embodiment of the invention. Asdescribed above, a plurality of queues may be instantiated at datastore118, each queue corresponding to a network sensor. Machine learningmodule 122 may retrieve the metadata stored in one of the queues,determine the embedded device from which the metadata originated, andconstruct (or update) a behavioral profile of the embedded device basedon the metadata. All or more of the following may be used to constructan algorithmic representation of the behavioral profile of the embeddeddevice: supervised and unsupervised machine learning (including but notlimited to decision tree, Naive Bayes, stochastic gradient descent,support vector machine, and K-Means). In the example of FIG. 3,behavioral profile 302 a is constructed for embedded device 102 a basedon the metadata stored in queue 120 a, and behavioral profile 302 b isconstructed for embedded device 102 b based on the metadata stored inqueue 120 b. In one embodiment of the invention, a behavioral profilemay comprise a state machine (e.g., modeling the operation states of anembedded machine, the average time resident in each of the states, theprobability of transitioning from one state to another, etc.).

Behavioral analysis module 124 may comprise one or more comparisonmodules (e.g., comparison module 304 a, 304 b). Comparison module 304 ais configured to compare the recent behavior of embedded device 102 a(as determined from the metadata stored in queue 120 a) with the typicalbehavior of embedded device 102 a (as reflected in behavioral profile302 a). Similarly, comparison module 304 b is configured to compare therecent behavior of embedded device 102 b (as determined from themetadata stored in queue 120 b) with the typical behavior of embeddeddevice 102 b (as reflected in behavioral profile 302 b). The comparisonmethodologies of the recent behavior to the typical behavior may beperformed via statistical classification provided by machine learningalgorithms (e.g., decision tree, Naive Bayes, stochastic gradientdescent, support vector machine, and K-Means). For each recent behaviorof embedded device 102 a, a vectorized representation of the metadatamay be provided to all of the machine learning algorithms that areselected for a certain type of embedded device. Each machine learningalgorithm may respond to the vectorized representation of the metadatawith either a scalar value which represents the statistical “closeness”to the typical behavior of the embedded device or a binaryclassification of “in class” or “out of class”. The output of each ofthe machine learning algorithms may be weighted depending on anestimated reliability of the respective machine learning algorithmoutput, and the weighted outputs may be aggregated in the form of avector. If the recent behavior deviates from the typical behavior (asdescribed above), the occurrence of such an event may be transmitted tonotification module 126, which in turn notifies user 306 of theoccurrence of the atypical behavior and/or the behavior that wasatypical.

In some instances, user 306 may conclude that the atypical behavior isnot actually malicious or suspicious in nature (e.g., the atypicalbehavior was due to a software upgrade, the introduction of a newfeature, etc.), and in such cases, the user may provide such feedback tomachine learning module 122. The machine learning module, in turn, maybe updated to re-categorize the atypical behavior as typical (e.g.,adding a new state to a state machine). If, however, the user confirmsthat the monitored behavior is in fact atypical, the user may take theappropriate measures to address the potential problem (e.g., take theembedded device offline for troubleshooting, perform calibration onembedded device, etc.).

As a simplified example, suppose the behavioral profile of a wirelessscale included two vectors. Vector 1=[source MAC=00:0a:95:9d:69:16,packet length=1k, source IP=172.16.254.1, source port=30, destinationIP=211.11.123.2, destination port=20, time stamp =12:24:11], whilevector 2=[source MAC=00:0a:95:9d:69:16, packet length=2k, sourceIP=172.16.254.1, source port=30, destination IP=211.11.123.2,destination port=15, time stamp =02:02:01]. Further, suppose thatmachine learning module 122 is able to infer that vector 1 is associatedwith the transmission of a measured weight, and vector 2 is associatedwith the request for calibration information. If the vectorizedrepresentation of the metadata collected for the wireless scale were[source MAC=00:0a:95:9d:69:16, packet length=1k, source IP=172.16.254.1,source port=30, destination IP=211.11.123.2, destination port=20, timestamp =12:23:16], behavioral analysis module 124 may recognize that suchvectorized metadata is sufficiently similar to vector 1 (i.e., allfields of the vectorized metadata are identical to the fields of vector1, except for the time stamp, which is within one minute of the timestamp of vector 1), and infer that the current behavior of the wirelessscale is the transmission of a measured weight.

On the other hand, if the vectorized representation of the metadatacollected for the wireless scale were [source MAC=00:0a:95:9d:69:16,packet length=100k, source IP=172.16.254.1, source port=30, destinationIP=123.14.222.10, destination port=50, time stamp =05:12:11], behavioralanalysis module 124 may determine that such vectorized metadata is notsufficiently similar to either vector 1 or vector 2 (i.e., none of thefields of the vectorized metadata are equal or even close to any of thecorresponding fields of vector 1 or vector 2). As a result, behavioralanalysis module may conclude that the behavior of the embedded devicedeviates from the typical behavior of the embedded device and may sendan alert to notification module 126.

Sufficiency of similarity between vectorized representations of metadatamay be determined in a variety of fashions, and may be made on aconstituent-by-constituent or a vector-by-vector basis. For example,individual constituent of a vectorized representation of metadata may becompared, constituent-by-constituent, where sufficiency of similarity ona constituent-Patent basis varies between constituents. In someinstances, similarity for a given constituent may involve a significantdeviation from a specified norm. In other cases, little or no suchvariation may be permitted. Likewise, in a vector-by-vector comparison(say a using a dot product between a vectorized representation ofrecently collected metadata and a vectorized representation of typicalbehavior as captured in a behavioral profile) significant, some, or nodeviations from the typical behavior may be permissible.

In one embodiment of the invention, server 116 (or portions thereof) maybe deployed as a single-tenant Amazon Web Services (AWS)™ instance. Forexample, one AWS instance may be used to monitor the embedded devices ofone enterprise, while another AWS instance may be used to monitor theembedded devices of another enterprise (with the advantage of keepingthe data of different enterprises separate from one another).

FIG. 4 depicts system 400 in which an embedded device 402 is configuredto transmit performance beacons to server 116, in accordance with oneembodiment of the invention. Embedded device 402 may be representativeof embedded devices 102 a and/or 102 b, and may comprise processor 404,network interface 406 and memory 408. If not already apparent, memory408 may comprise any non-volatile memory (e.g., EPROM, EEPROM, flashmemory), battery-backed volatile memory (e.g., DRAM, SRAM), or any otherdata storage device.

Stored within memory 408 may be computer-readable instructions, whichwhen executed by processor 404 cause processor 404 to perform functions410 a and 410 b. Each of functions 410 a and 410 b may be a firmwarefunction (i.e., a function present in firmware). While two functionshave been depicted for simplicity, it is understood that more (or fewer)functions may be present in practice. Code 412 a may be inserted (orinjected) into function 410 a, and code 412 b may be inserted (orinjected) into function 410 b.

Whenever function 410 a (or function 410 b) is executed, code 412 a (orcode 412 b) is configured to generate a performance beacon that iswirelessly transmitted from embedded device 402 via network interface406. In one embodiment, performance beacons may be received by networkswitch 108 a, which forwards the performance beacons to server 116(without the involvement of a network sensor). In an alternativeembodiment, performance beacons may be received by network switch 108 a,transmitted to network sensor 112 a via mirror port 110 a, and thentransmitted to server 116 via network sensor 112 a.

For clarity, it is noted that such approach of wirelessly transmittingperformance beacons is distinct from a debug mode of operation, in whicha probe is connected to the debug port of an embedded device and statusmessages are received from the debug port. In the latter approach, aperson would need to be physically present to insert a probe into adebug port, while in the former approach, a person need not be presentat the same location as the embedded device. Further, a debug port maynot even be present on the embedded device of the former approach.

A performance beacon may include one or more of a MAC address ofembedded device 402 (used to identify the device that sent theperformance beacon), a program counter value of processor 404 when theperformance beacon was generated (used to understand where the firmwarewas executing in memory), a tick count of processor 404 when theperformance beacon was generated (used to build a chronology of theoperations), or a stack value of processor 404 when the performancebeacon was generated (which provides finer resolution when determiningthe state of the firmware execution). In addition, counter valuesproduced by counters instantiated by the inserted code may betransmitted along with the program counter that (when combined with theprocessor tick count) assist with the reconstruction of the chronologyof the transmitted performance beacons. The reconstruction of thechronology may be necessary when using UDP to transmit beacons, as UDPtransmission may cause packets to be received in an order different fromthe order in which they were transmitted.

A collection of performance beacons (generated in response to theexecution of a plurality of functions) may be used by server 116 toreconstruct the execution path of embedded device 402 (e.g., build atree of execution flow of the firmware). The typical execution path ofembedded device 402 may be learned over time (e.g., by machine learningmodule 122). The recent execution path of embedded device 402 may becompared to its typical execution path, allowing server 116 to identifywhether the recent behavior of embedded device 402 is typical oratypical.

In one embodiment of the invention, code 412 a and 412 b may bedeveloped by a first enterprise that provides the behavioral analysisservices at server 116, and functions 410 a and 410 b may be developedby a second enterprise that manufactures embedded device 402. Code 412 a(and code 412 b) may be inserted into function 410 a (and function 410b) by a software developer of the second enterprise, and the“instrumented code” may be installed on embedded device 402. For theconvenience of the software developer, the inserted code may be veryshort in length (e.g., a single line, a code snippet, etc.), and theinserted code, when executed by processor 404, may be configured toinvoke a routine (e.g., stored in a library) that causes the performancebeacon to be transmitted. In the instance where the aforementionedroutine is stored in a library, the library would also be stored onmemory 408.

It is noted that FIG. 4 has been simplified for ease of illustration. Ina more complete version of FIG. 4, network 106 a would communicativelycouple embedded device 402 to network switch 108 a. Similarly, network114 would communicatively couple network switch 108 a to server 116. Inone embodiment, performance beacons may be broadcasted to a broadcastaddress of network 106 a in an unencrypted form using the user datagramprotocol (UDP). Unencrypted communication has the benefit of reducedprocessing for the embedded device, and UDP has the benefit of avoidingthe overhead of the TCP handshake. The broadcast of the performancebeacons (as compared to the unicast of same) provides greaterflexibility in the deployment of the embedded device. For example, anydevice can be configured to monitor the performance beacons without anyadditional change to the firmware of the embedded device (i.e., afterthe embedded device has been deployed with the inserted code (412 a, 412b), no additional change to the firmware is needed).

Network sensor 112 a would then be employed to forward the performancebeacons to server 116. In an alternative embodiment, performance beaconsmay be unicast to server 116, avoiding the need for network sensor 112 ato forward the performance beacons to server 116.

In one embodiment of the invention, performance beacons may be “alwayson”, meaning that performance beacons are always transmitted, regardlessof whether any device is present to receive and process the performancebeacons. In an alternative embodiment, an embedded device may beactivated to transmit performance beacons when needed. For example, atoggle switch might be present on the embedded device that allows a userto activate the transmission of performance beacons only when theperformance beacons are being monitored. The latter embodiment may beuseful for “untethered” embedded devices in which low power operation isessential.

In one embodiment of the invention, only a subset of the functionsstored on memory 408 is instrumented to generate performance beacons.Criteria for selecting which functions to instrument include thefrequency that a function is called (e.g., functions that are calledvery frequently may not be good candidates as this may lead toperformance beacons flooding the network), the sequence in whichfunctions are called (e.g., it may be desirable to instrument a functionthat is called upon the successful execution of a series of functions),and the predictability that a function is called (e.g., it may not bedesirable to instrument a function that is repeatedly executed with aset period). Further, it may be desirable to instrument functions thatonly execute during boot, functions that execute under “edge cases”,functions that open files, functions that communicate with the network,functions that call library routines, and functions tied to the businesslogic of firmware. Generally, it is recommended to instrument functionsthat provide a good snapshot of the operational health of an embeddeddevice.

To further describe performance beacons, FIG. 5 depicts flowchart 500 ofan algorithm that has been instrumented to transmit performance beaconsat various junctures in the algorithm, in accordance with one embodimentof the invention. Flowchart 500 may be an excerpt of a firmware programexecuting on a programmable logic controller (PLC), or a robotic arm. Atstep 502, the algorithm may initialize peripherals (e.g., move arms toinitial position, clear buffers, etc.). At step 504, the algorithm mayreceive input (e.g., an obstacle being sensed). The wireless antennasymbol in step 504 illustrates that the “receive input” function hasbeen configured to transmit a performance beacon whenever the “receiveinput” function is executed. At step 506, the received input may beprocessed. In response to the processed input, a robotic arm may moveleft (step 508) or move right (step 510). At step 512, the algorithm maysend an output (e.g., transmit meter data or telemetry data). Thewireless antenna symbol in step 512 similarly illustrates that the “sendoutput” function has been configured to transmit a performance beaconwhenever the “send output” function is executed. The algorithm mayreturn to step 504 following step 512.

FIG. 6 depicts performance beacons 600, in accordance with oneembodiment of the invention. Each row of the table may record aperformance beacon comprising a device identifier (e.g., an identifierof the embedded device that transmitted the performance beacon), abeacon identifier (e.g., a value that uniquely identifies the beaconlocation in the firmware and hence the function being executed withinthe firmware), and a CPU time stamp (e.g., the CPU time when thefunction was executed), which may also be called a “tick count”. Forexample, the first row of the table 602 records a performance beaconwith the device identifier of “device A”, the beacon identifier of“receive input”, and the CPU time stamp of 1471026738.586375. Based onan increasing order of the CPU time stamps, the performance beacons maybe determined to have been transmitted from an embedded device in thefollowing order: 602, 604, 608 and 606. From such sequence ofperformance beacons, the execution path of the embedded device may beinferred to be “receive input”, “send output”, “send output”, followedby “receive input”.

If not already apparent, it is noted that performance beacons and theabove-described network traffic metadata are two different types ofinformation which may both serve the similar purpose of analyzing thebehavior of network-connected embedded devices. Performance beacons mayreveal lower level operational details of an embedded device (e.g.,which firmware functions were called, in what order, etc.), whereasnetwork traffic metadata may reveal higher level operational details(e.g., how often network packets were transmitted, where the networkpackets were transmitted to, etc.). In other words, performance beaconsin most cases should not be understood as a type of network trafficmetadata, but rather as a class of information distinct from networktraffic metadata.

FIG. 7 depicts flowchart 700 of a process for collecting metadata fromthe network traffic of one or more embedded devices and transmitting themetadata to a server, in accordance with one embodiment of theinvention. At step 702, the network sensor may monitor network trafficon a first network, the first network including one or more embeddeddevices and one or more general-purpose devices. The network traffic maycomprise data packets, and each data packet may contain metadata that isencapsulated in a packet header. At step 704, the network sensor mayinspect the network traffic so as to distinguish network traffic that isassociated with the embedded devices from network traffic that isassociated with devices other than the embedded devices. The networksensor may rely upon one or more of IP addresses of the network trafficor MAC addresses of the network traffic in order to identify trafficoriginating from embedded devices. At step 706, the network sensor maytransmit metadata from the network traffic associated with the embeddeddevices to a server. Such metadata may include one or more of the TCP/IPpacket length, time stamps, sequence numbers, flags, destination IPaddresses, source IP addresses, destination port addresses, source portaddresses, or the MAC addresses of data packets.

FIG. 8 depicts flowchart 800 of a process for analyzing the behavior ofone or more embedded devices, in accordance with one embodiment of theinvention. At step 802, a server may receive metadata from a firstnetwork sensor. At step 804, the server may store the metadata in afirst queue associated with the first network sensor. In the case wherethere are multiple network sensors, a queue may be created for each ofthe network sensors. At step 806, the server may analyze the metadatausing machine learning techniques in order to detect anomalous behaviorof the one or more embedded devices. Step 806 is further described belowin FIG. 900.

FIG. 9 depicts flowchart 900 of a process for comparing the recentbehavior of an embedded device to the typical behavior of the embeddeddevice, in accordance with one embodiment of the invention. At step 902,a machine learning module may build a behavioral profile of an embeddeddevice based on metadata that has been collected from the networktraffic of the embedded device. As described above, supervised andunsupervised machine learning (including but not limited to decisiontree, Naive Bayes, stochastic gradient descent, support vector machine,and K-Means) may be employed to generate the behavioral profile. At step904, a behavioral analysis module may monitor the behavior of theembedded device based on metadata that has been recently collected fromthe network traffic of the embedded device. For example, a certainsequence or collection of metadata may be recognized as being associatedwith a certain behavior, and a vectorized representation of the metadatamay be formed corresponding to the recognized behavior. At step 906, thebehavioral analysis module may compare the monitored behavior of theembedded device (e.g., metadata organized in a vectorizedrepresentation) with a typical behavior of the embedded device ascaptured in the behavioral profile of the embedded device so as todetermine whether the monitored behavior deviated from the typicalbehavior.

At step 908, the behavioral analysis module may determine whether themonitored behavior deviated from the typical behavior. If so, anotification module may notify a user via a web-based interface, emailor a text message that the monitored behavior of the embedded devicedeviated from the typical behavior of the embedded device (step 910). Atstep 910, the notification module may further provide some context ofthe embedded device (e.g., input from sensors), so that the user may beable to infer the root cause of the atypical behavior. At step 910, thenotification module may further provide actionable insights (e.g.,requesting a user to change batteries, clean a sensor, etc.). While notdepicted in FIG. 9, it is understood that following step 910 the user,in some instances, may provide feedback to the machine learning modulewhich informs the machine learning module that a behavior of an embeddeddevice was improperly categorized as atypical, allowing the machinelearning module to adjust the typical behaviors that are stored in thebehavioral profile. In either the “NO” branch of step 908 or theconclusion of step 910, the process may continue with the machinelearning module continuing to build the behavioral profile of theembedded device. While flowchart 900 was discussed in the context of asingle embedded device, it is understood that flowchart 900 may beindependently performed for each embedded device.

While the embodiments described above have solely focus on monitoringthe behavior of embedded devices, a greater degree of freedom inselecting the devices to monitor (or to not monitor) is provided inanother embodiment. For instance, a user could be provided with acomplete list of devices on network 106 a that have been detected bynetwork sensor 112 a, and the user is provided the ability to select oneor more of the detected devices (possibly including general-purposedevices) that should be monitored by server 116.

As is apparent from the foregoing discussion, aspects of the presentinvention involve the use of various computer systems and computerreadable storage media having computer-readable instructions storedthereon. FIG. 10 provides an example of a system 1000 that may berepresentative of any of the computing systems (e.g., embedded device,general-purpose device, network switch, router, network sensor, server,etc.) discussed herein. Note, not all of the various computer systemshave all of the features of system 1000. For example, certain ones ofthe computer systems discussed above may not include a display inasmuchas the display function may be provided by a client computercommunicatively coupled to the computer system or a display function maybe unnecessary. Such details are not critical to the present invention.

System 1000 includes a bus 1002 or other communication mechanism forcommunicating information, and a processor 1004 coupled with the bus1002 for processing information. Computer system 1000 also includes amain memory 1006, such as a random access memory (RAM) or other dynamicstorage device, coupled to the bus 1002 for storing information andinstructions to be executed by processor 1004. Main memory 1006 also maybe used for storing temporary variables or other intermediateinformation during execution of instructions to be executed by processor1004. Computer system 1000 further includes a read only memory (ROM)1008 or other static storage device coupled to the bus 1002 for storingstatic information and instructions for the processor 1004. A storagedevice 1010, for example a hard disk, flash memory-based storage medium,or other storage medium from which processor 1004 can read, is providedand coupled to the bus 1002 for storing information and instructions(e.g., operating systems, applications programs and the like).

Computer system 1000 may be coupled via the bus 1002 to a display 1012,such as a flat panel display, for displaying information to a computeruser. An input device 1014, such as a keyboard including alphanumericand other keys, may be coupled to the bus 1002 for communicatinginformation and command selections to the processor 1004. Another typeof user input device is cursor control device 1016, such as a mouse, atrackpad, or similar input device for communicating directioninformation and command selections to processor 1004 and for controllingcursor movement on the display 1012. Other user interface devices, suchas microphones, speakers, etc. are not shown in detail but may beinvolved with the receipt of user input and/or presentation of output.

The processes referred to herein may be implemented by processor 1004executing appropriate sequences of computer-readable instructionscontained in main memory 1006. Such instructions may be read into mainmemory 1006 from another computer-readable medium, such as storagedevice 1010, and execution of the sequences of instructions contained inthe main memory 1006 causes the processor 1004 to perform the associatedactions. In alternative embodiments, hard-wired circuitry orfirmware-controlled processing units may be used in place of or incombination with processor 1004 and its associated computer softwareinstructions to implement the invention. The computer-readableinstructions may be rendered in any computer language.

In general, all of the above process descriptions are meant to encompassany series of logical steps performed in a sequence to accomplish agiven purpose, which is the hallmark of any computer-executableapplication. Unless specifically stated otherwise, it should beappreciated that throughout the description of the present invention,use of terms such as “processing”, “computing”, “calculating”,“determining”, “displaying”, “receiving”, “transmitting” or the like,refer to the action and processes of an appropriately programmedcomputer system, such as computer system 1000 or similar electroniccomputing device, that manipulates and transforms data represented asphysical (electronic) quantities within its registers and memories intoother data similarly represented as physical quantities within itsmemories or registers or other such information storage, transmission ordisplay devices.

Computer system 1000 also includes a communication interface 1018coupled to the bus 1002. Communication interface 1018 may provide atwo-way data communication channel with a computer network, whichprovides connectivity to and among the various computer systemsdiscussed above. For example, communication interface 1018 may be alocal area network (LAN) card to provide a data communication connectionto a compatible LAN, which itself is communicatively coupled to theInternet through one or more Internet service provider networks. Theprecise details of such communication paths are not critical to thepresent invention. What is important is that computer system 1000 cansend and receive messages and data through the communication interface1018 and in that way communicate with hosts accessible via the Internet.

Thus, methods and systems for remotely detecting the anomalous behaviorof network-connected embedded devices have been described. It is to beunderstood that the above-description is intended to be illustrative,and not restrictive. Many other embodiments will be apparent to those ofskill in the art upon reviewing the above description. The scope of theinvention should, therefore, be determined with reference to theappended claims, along with the full scope of equivalents to which suchclaims are entitled.

What is claimed is:
 1. A method for an embedded device, the embeddeddevice including a processor, a network interface, and a data storagedevice storing firmware of the embedded device, the method comprising:for each of a plurality of functions that are part of the firmware ofthe embedded device, (i) executing the function by the processor of theembedded device, wherein prior the execution of the function, code isinserted into the function, the code configured to initiate a processduring which a performance beacon is wirelessly transmitted from theembedded device, and (ii) in response to the function being executed,wirelessly transmitting, by the network interface, the performancebeacon from the embedded device, wherein the performance beacon includesan identifier of the embedded device, an identifier of the function, anda time stamp recording a time at which the function was executed,wherein a plurality of performance beacons are received by a server andare used to reconstruct an execution flow of the embedded device.
 2. Themethod of claim 1, wherein the inserted code comprises a code snippet,and execution of the inserted code causes a routine that is stored in alibrary to be invoked, the routine causing the performance beacon to bewirelessly transmitted.
 3. The method of claim 1, wherein the identifierof the embedded device includes a media access control (MAC) address ofthe embedded device.
 4. The method of claim 1, wherein the performancebeacon further comprises a program counter value of the processor whenthe performance beacon was generated.
 5. The method of claim 1, whereinthe performance beacon further comprises a stack value of the processorwhen the performance beacon was generated.
 6. The method of claim 1,wherein wirelessly transmitting the performance beacon from the embeddeddevice comprises transmitting the performance beacon in an unencryptedform to a broadcast address of a network using a user datagram protocol(UDP).
 7. The method of claim 1, wherein the plurality of functionsincludes a function that is only executed during a boot process of theembedded device.
 8. An embedded device including a processor, a networkinterface, and a data storage device configured to store firmware of theembedded device, the firmware including instructions which when executedby the processor causes the processor to: for each of a plurality offunctions that are part of the firmware of the embedded device, (i)execute the function, wherein prior to the execution of the function,code is inserted into the function, the code configured to initiate aprocess during which a performance beacon is wirelessly transmitted fromthe embedded device, and (ii) in response to the function beingexecuted, instruct the network interface to wirelessly transmit theperformance beacon from the embedded device, wherein the performancebeacon includes an identifier of the embedded device, an identifier ofthe function, and a time stamp recording a time at which the functionwas executed, wherein a plurality of performance beacons are received bya server and are used to reconstruct an execution flow of the embeddeddevice.
 9. The embedded device of claim 8, wherein the inserted codecomprises a code snippet, and the execution of the inserted code causesa routine that is stored in a library to be invoked, the routine causingthe performance beacon to be wirelessly transmitted.
 10. The embeddeddevice of claim 8, wherein the identifier of the embedded deviceincludes a media access control (MAC) address of the embedded device.11. The embedded device of claim 8, wherein the performance beaconfurther comprises a program counter value of the processor when theperformance beacon was generated.
 12. The embedded device of claim 8,wherein the performance beacon further comprises a stack value of theprocessor when the performance beacon was generated.
 13. The embeddeddevice of claim 8, wherein wirelessly transmitting the performancebeacon from the embedded device comprises transmitting the performancebeacon in an unencrypted form to a broadcast address of a network usinga user datagram protocol (UDP).
 14. The embedded device of claim 8,wherein the plurality of functions includes a function that is onlyexecuted during a boot process of the embedded device.
 15. Anon-transitory computer-readable medium for an embedded device includinga processor, a network interface, and a storage device configured tostore firmware of the embedded device, the non-transitorycomputer-readable medium including instructions which when executed bythe processor cause the processor to: for each of a plurality offunctions that are part of the firmware of the embedded device, (i)execute the function, wherein prior to the execution of the function,code is inserted into the function, the code configured to initiate aprocess during which a performance beacon is wirelessly transmitted fromthe embedded device, and (ii) in response to the function beingexecuted, instruct the network interface to wirelessly transmit theperformance beacon from the embedded device, wherein the performancebeacon includes an identifier of the embedded device, an identifier ofthe function, and a time stamp recording a time at which the functionwas executed, wherein a plurality of performance beacons are received bya server and are used to reconstruct an execution flow of the embeddeddevice.
 16. The non-transitory computer-readable medium of claim 15,wherein the inserted code comprises a code snippet, and the execution ofthe inserted code causes a routine that is stored in a library to beinvoked, the routine causing the performance beacon to be wirelesslytransmitted.
 17. The non-transitory computer-readable medium of claim15, wherein the identifier of the embedded device includes a mediaaccess control (MAC) address of the embedded device.
 18. Thenon-transitory computer-readable medium of claim 15, wherein theperformance beacon further comprises a program counter value of theprocessor when the performance beacon was generated.
 19. Thenon-transitory computer-readable medium of claim 15, wherein theperformance beacon further comprises a stack value of the processor whenthe performance beacon was generated.
 20. The non-transitorycomputer-readable medium of claim 15, wherein the plurality of functionsincludes a function that is only executed during a boot process of theembedded device.